Title: The Muscular System
1The Muscular System
2- or Everything you ever wanted to know about
Muscles, but were afraid to ask !!!
3Did you know that ?
- more than 50 of body weight is muscle !
- And muscle is made up of proteins and water
4(No Transcript)
5The Muscular System
- Muscles are responsible for all movement of the
body - There are three basic types of muscle
- Skeletal
- Cardiac
- Smooth
6Info About Muscles
- Only body tissue able to contract
- create movement by flexing and extending joints
- Body energy converters (many muscle cells contain
many mitochondria)
73 Types of Muscles
8Three types of muscle
9Classification of Muscle
Skeletal- found in limbs Cardiac- found in heart Smooth- Found in viscera
Striated, multi- nucleated Striated, 1 nucleus Not striated, 1 nucleus
voluntary involuntary involuntary
10Characteristics of Muscle
- Skeletal and smooth muscle are elongated
- Muscle cell muscle fiber
- Contraction of a muscle is due to movement of
microfilaments (protein fibers) - All muscles share some terminology
- Prefixes myo and mys refer to muscle
- Prefix sarco refers to flesh
11Shapes of Muscles
- Triangular- shoulder, neck
- Spindle- arms, legs
- Flat- diaphragm, forehead
- Circular- mouth, anus
12Skeletal Muscle
- Most are attached by tendons to bones
- Cells have more than one nucleus (multinucleated)
- Striated- have stripes, banding
- Voluntary- subject to conscious control
- Tendons are mostly made of collagen fibers
- Found in the limbs
- Produce movement, maintain posture, generate
heat, stabilize joints
13Structure of skeletal muscle
- Each cell (fibre) is long and cylindrical
- Muscle fibres are multi-nucleated
- Typically 50-60mm in diameter, and up to 10cm
long - The contractile elements ofskeletal muscle cells
aremyofibrils
14Skeletal muscle - Summary
- Voluntary movement of skeletal parts
- Spans joints and attached to skeleton
- Multi-nucleated, striated, cylindrical fibres
15Smooth Muscle
- No striations
- Spindle shaped
- Single nucleus
- Involuntary- no conscious control
- Found mainly in the walls of hollow organs
16Smooth muscle
- Lines walls of viscera
- Found in longitudinal or circular arrangement
- Alternate contraction of circular longitudinal
muscle in the intestine leads to peristalsis
17Structure of smooth muscle
- Spindle shaped uni-nucleated cells
- Striations not observed
- Actin and myosin filaments are present( protein
fibers)
18Smooth muscle - Summary
- Found in walls of hollow internal organs
- Involuntary movement of internal organs
- Elongated, spindle shaped fibre with single
nucleus
19Cardiac Muscle
- Striations
- Branching cells
- Involuntary
- Found only in the heart
- Usually has a single nucleus, but can have more
than one
20Cardiac muscle
- Main muscle of heart
- Pumping mass of heart
- Critical in humans
- Heart muscle cells behave as one unit
- Heart always contracts to its full
extent
21Structure of cardiac muscle
- Cardiac muscle cells (fibres) are short, branched
and interconnected - Cells are striated usually have 1 nucleus
- Adjacent cardiac cells are joined via electrical
synapses (gap junctions) - These gap junctions appear as dark lines and are
called intercalated discs
22Cardiac muscle - Summary
- Found in the heart
- Involuntary rhythmic contraction
- Branched, striated fibre with single nucleus and
intercalated discs
23Muscle Control
Skeletal
Skeletal
Cardiac
Smooth
24Types of Responses
- Twitch-
- A single brief contraction
- Not a normal muscle function
- Tetanus
- One contraction immediately followed by another
- Muscle never completely returns to a relaxed
state - Effects are compounded
25Where Does the Energy Come From?
- Energy is stored in the muscles in the form of
ATP - ATP comes from the breakdown of glucose during
Cellular Respiration - This all happens in the Mitochondria of the cell
- When a muscle is fatigued (tired) it is unable to
contract because of lack of Oxygen
26Exercise and Muscles
- Isotonic- muscles shorten and movement occurs (
most normal exercise) - Isometric- tension in muscles increases, no
movement occurs (pushing one hand against the
other)
27How are Muscles Attached to Bone?
- Origin-attachment to a movable bone
- Insertion- attachment to an immovable bone
- Muscles are always attached to at least 2 points
- Movement is attained due to a muscle moving an
attached bone
28Muscle Attachments
29Flexion
Types of Musculo-Skeletal Movement
30Extension
31Hyperextension
32Abduction, Adduction Circumduction
33Rotation
34More Types of Movement
- Inversion- turn sole of foot medially
- Eversion- turn sole of foot laterally
- Pronation- palm facing down
- Supination- palm facing up
- Opposition- thumb touches tips of fingers on the
same hand
35The Skeletal MusclesThere are about 650 muscles
in the human body. They enable us to move,
maintain posture and generate heat. In this
section we will only study a sample of the major
muscles.
36Sternocleidomastoideus
37Masseter
38Temporalis
39Trapezius
- Extend Head, Adduct, Elevate or Depress Scapula
40Latissimus Dorsi
- Extend, Adduct Rotate Arm Medially
41Deltoid
42Pectoralis Major
- Flexes, adducts rotates arm medially
43Biceps Brachii
44Triceps Brachii
45Rectus Abdominus
46External Oblique
47External Intercostals
48Internal Intercostals
49Diaphragm
50Forearm Muscles
- Flexor carpiFlexes wrist
- Extensor carpiExtends wrist
- Flexor digitorumFlexes fingers
- Extensor digitorumExtends fingers
- PronatorPronates
- SupinatorSupinates
51Gluteus Maximus
- Extends Rotates Thigh Laterally
52Rectus Femoris
- Flexes Thigh, Extends Lower Leg
53Gracilis
54Sartorius
- Flexes Thigh, Rotates Thigh Laterally
55Biceps Femoris
- Extends Thigh Flexes Lower Leg
56Gastrocnemius
- Plantar Flexes Foot Flex Lower Leg
57Tibialis Anterior
- Dorsiflexes and Inverts Foot